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Mauritius AMLA 2026: Practical Compliance Guide for Boards, Fund Managers & Trustees

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The Anti‑Money Laundering, Combatting the Financing of Terrorism and Countering Proliferation Financing Act 2026, commonly shortened to AMLA 2026, was enacted on 18 April 2026, replacing and consolidating the previous FIAMLA framework and reshaping AMLA compliance Mauritius obligations for every regulated entity on the island. The new statute broadens the definitions of reportable persons, strengthens the Financial Intelligence Unit’s (FIU) investigative powers, and introduces explicit beneficial‑ownership register requirements that reach deep into fund structures, Global Business Companies (GBCs) and trust arrangements. For board directors, fund managers, trustees and corporate service providers, the practical question is no longer whether compliance frameworks must change, but how quickly remediation can be completed before regulators begin targeted inspections.

This guide delivers the actionable checklists, entity‑specific obligation tables and 30/60/90‑day remediation playbook that decision‑makers need right now.

Executive Summary: Who Should Read This and Why It Matters Now

Read this if you are a board member, trustee, fund manager or corporate service provider in Mauritius. The Anti‑Money Laundering Act 2026 creates immediate new obligations that cannot wait for the next board cycle. Here is what changed, who is affected and what to do first:

  • What changed. AMLA 2026 consolidates and expands Mauritius’ AML/CFT/CPF framework. It widens the scope of “reporting persons,” introduces mandatory beneficial‑ownership registers, strengthens FIU powers and raises maximum penalties for non‑compliance.
  • Who is affected. Licensed funds, fund managers (including alternative investment fund managers), GBCs, trust and corporate service providers, banks, insurance companies, designated non‑financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs), and their boards of directors.
  • Immediate actions (30/60/90 days). Within 30 days: conduct a gap analysis against AMLA 2026 and convene a board briefing. Within 60 days: update AML/CFT policies, appoint or reconfirm the Money Laundering Reporting Officer (MLRO), and begin beneficial‑ownership register remediation. Within 90 days: complete staff training, test the updated suspicious‑activity reporting chain and document everything for audit readiness.

The sections that follow unpack each obligation, map it to the relevant entity type, and provide downloadable templates to accelerate implementation.

The Anti‑Money Laundering Act 2026: Quick Legal Snapshot

AMLA 2026, formally cited as Act 3 of 2026, received Presidential assent on 18 April 2026 and came into operation on that date. The full text is published on the Laws of Mauritius portal. It replaces the Financial Intelligence and Anti‑Money Laundering Act 2002 (FIAMLA) and related subsidiary legislation, consolidating AML, CFT and countering proliferation financing (CPF) into a single statute. The key statutory changes that practitioners must absorb are:

  • Expanded scope of “reporting persons.” The definition now expressly captures virtual‑asset service providers (VASPs), trust and corporate service providers (TCSPs), and certain categories of professionals previously treated as DNFBPs under separate guidance.
  • Mandatory beneficial‑ownership registers. Legal persons and legal arrangements must establish, maintain and keep current a register of beneficial owners. Trustees must identify and verify beneficial owners of trusts and transmit that information to the relevant supervisory body.
  • Enhanced FIU investigative powers. The FIU may now request information directly from any reporting person without a court order, issue compliance directives and share information with foreign counterpart agencies under broader mutual‑assistance provisions.
  • Corporate service provider obligations. Management companies and corporate service providers face explicit due‑diligence duties for the entities they administer, including ongoing monitoring of transactions and source‑of‑funds verification.
  • Increased penalties. Maximum fines and custodial sentences for money‑laundering offences and regulatory non‑compliance have been raised substantially.
Change Previous Law (FIAMLA) Practical Effect Under AMLA 2026
Scope of reporting persons Defined categories; VASPs added by amendment Single consolidated list; VASPs, TCSPs and additional DNFBPs included from enactment
Beneficial‑ownership registers Guidance‑based; no express statutory mandate Statutory obligation; must be maintained, updated and made available to supervisory bodies
FIU information‑gathering Court order required for certain requests FIU may request information directly; compliance directives enforceable
Penalties (money laundering) Fines and imprisonment at previous thresholds Maximum fines and custodial terms increased; director liability provisions strengthened

Key Statutory Definitions to Watch

Practitioners should pay close attention to the expanded definition of beneficial owner, which now captures any natural person who ultimately owns or controls a legal person or arrangement, including through a chain of ownership or control. The Act also introduces a definition of virtual‑asset business activity (VBA) aligned with FATF standards. The treatment of politically exposed persons (PEPs) is tightened, requiring ongoing, not merely onboarding, enhanced due diligence.

Enforcement and Penalties

AMLA 2026 increases the maximum custodial sentence for money‑laundering offences and raises the ceiling for administrative fines that regulators may impose on non‑compliant reporting persons. Directors and senior officers may be held personally liable where non‑compliance results from their neglect, consent or connivance. Industry observers expect the strengthened penalty framework to signal a more assertive enforcement posture from both the FSC and the Bank of Mauritius in the coming inspection cycle.

Who Enforces and Supervises AMLA Compliance Mauritius?

Mauritius operates a multi‑agency AML/CFT/CPF supervisory architecture. Understanding which body supervises your entity type is the first step toward efficient compliance.

  • Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU). The central agency for receiving, analysing and disseminating suspicious transaction reports (STRs) and suspicious activity reports (SARs). All reporting persons must file SARs with the FIU.
  • Financial Services Commission (FSC). The primary regulator for non‑bank financial services, including licensed funds, fund managers, GBCs, insurance, securities and global business. The FSC issues AML/CFT codes and conducts supervisory inspections of FSC licensees.
  • Bank of Mauritius (BoM). Supervises banks, non‑bank deposit‑taking institutions and payment service providers. The BoM publishes AML/CFT guidance and conducts on‑site examinations for banking‑sector entities.
  • Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). Prosecutes money‑laundering, terrorism financing and proliferation financing offences referred by the FIU or law enforcement.
  • Gambling Regulatory Authority, Registrar of Companies and other sectoral supervisors. Exercise delegated AML supervisory functions for their respective sectors under AMLA 2026.

How Regulator Expectations Differ by Sector

Banks supervised by the BoM face the most granular KYC and transaction‑monitoring expectations, codified in BoM guidance notes. FSC‑regulated entities, funds, fund managers and GBCs, must comply with the FSC AML/CFT Code, which cross‑references AMLA 2026. Corporate service providers administering GBCs operate under both FSC expectations and the express statutory duties now embedded in the Act. Early indications suggest the FSC will prioritise beneficial‑ownership compliance during its first post‑enactment inspection round, while the BoM is expected to focus on enhanced due‑diligence processes for correspondent banking and cross‑border payment flows.

Impact on Funds, Fund Managers and GBCs Under AMLA 2026

AMLA 2026 affects fund managers compliance Mauritius obligations at every stage of the fund lifecycle, from investor onboarding through ongoing monitoring to exit. GBC requirements Mauritius have also shifted, particularly around beneficial‑ownership transparency and the responsibilities of management companies that administer GBC structures. This section maps the key obligations by entity type.

Licensed Funds (FSC‑Regulated)

Licensed funds, whether open‑ended or closed‑ended, must ensure that investor KYC files meet the new statutory standard for beneficial‑ownership identification. Where a fund relies on its manager or administrator to perform CDD, the fund itself retains ultimate responsibility under AMLA 2026. Ongoing monitoring of investors and transactions must be documented, and the frequency of periodic reviews should be calibrated to the fund’s assessed risk profile.

Licensed Fund Managers and AIFMs

Fund managers must establish a compliance function that is independent from business lines. The MLRO must have direct reporting access to the board and sufficient authority to escalate SARs without delay. Staff training on AML/CFT must be conducted at onboarding and refreshed annually, with evidence retained for inspection. Where the fund manager also acts as investment adviser to offshore vehicles, AMLA 2026 obligations apply to the Mauritius‑based advisory function.

Global Business Companies (GBCs)

GBCs must now maintain a statutory beneficial‑ownership register, updated promptly whenever ownership or control changes. The management company or corporate service provider administering a GBC bears concurrent obligations: it must collect, verify and retain BO data and make the register available to the FSC on request. For GBC structures involving nominee arrangements, the Act requires disclosure of the nominator’s identity through to the ultimate natural‑person beneficial owner.

Obligation / Topic Licensed Funds / Fund Managers GBCs / Trustees
Beneficial‑ownership disclosure FSC‑regulated BO obligations; manager must verify BOs of all investors GBCs must maintain and update a statutory BO register; trustees must collect BO data for trusts
MLRO and compliance function Mandatory; independence from front‑office required; direct board reporting line Required where entity holds an FSC licence or acts as a TCSP; CSPs must appoint MLRO
SAR reporting to FIU Manager must report suspicious transactions promptly; no minimum threshold Trustees and CSPs required to report SARs; obligation is personal to the reporting person
Ongoing monitoring Periodic investor reviews; transaction monitoring commensurate with risk Ongoing monitoring of administered entities; transaction surveillance for high‑risk GBCs
Training obligations Annual AML/CFT training; records kept for a minimum of five years Training for officers and relevant staff; trustees must train trust officers handling BO data
Recordkeeping period Minimum of seven years after the end of the business relationship Minimum of seven years; trustees must retain trust deed and BO records for the same period

Board and Trustee Duties: Corporate Governance AML Obligations and Director Liability

AMLA 2026 places direct obligations on boards of directors, reinforcing the link between corporate governance AML standards and statutory compliance. Directors can no longer delegate AML responsibility entirely to compliance officers and then claim ignorance. Under the new framework, the board must:

  • Formally approve the entity’s AML/CFT/CPF policy and ensure it reflects AMLA 2026 requirements.
  • Appoint the MLRO, ensure the role’s independence and confirm adequate resourcing.
  • Receive and consider periodic compliance reports, at a minimum, quarterly.
  • Allocate sufficient budget for compliance technology, training and external advisory support.
  • Ensure that all directors complete AML awareness training appropriate to the entity’s risk profile.
  • Record AML governance decisions in board minutes with sufficient detail to evidence active oversight.

Where non‑compliance results from a director’s neglect, consent or connivance, AMLA 2026 allows personal liability to attach. The likely practical effect will be a marked increase in the specificity of AML‑related board resolutions and the frequency with which boards receive compliance updates.

Trustees Compliance Mauritius: Specific Obligations and Conflict Management

Trustees face a distinct set of obligations under AMLA 2026. They must identify and verify the beneficial owners of every trust they administer, including settlors, protectors, beneficiaries and any person exercising effective control. Where a trust has a class of beneficiaries rather than named individuals, the trustee must assess risk on a class basis and apply enhanced due diligence at the point of distribution. Trustees must also manage conflicts of interest: where a trustee simultaneously acts as MLRO and investment decision‑maker, the Act’s independence requirements may necessitate restructuring internal reporting lines or appointing an external MLRO.

Sample Board Resolution Wording

“RESOLVED that the Board, having reviewed the Anti‑Money Laundering, Combatting the Financing of Terrorism and Countering Proliferation Financing Act 2026, hereby approves the updated AML/CFT/CPF Policy dated [DATE], appoints [NAME] as Money Laundering Reporting Officer with direct reporting access to the Board, and directs the Compliance function to complete a full gap analysis and staff training programme within 90 days.”

AML Risk Assessment Mauritius: Customer Due Diligence and KYC Under AMLA 2026

A robust AML risk assessment Mauritius framework is the foundation of every compliant programme. AMLA 2026 requires all reporting persons to carry out a business‑wide risk assessment, document the methodology and update it whenever material changes occur. The assessment must follow the standard three‑step process: identify ML/TF/PF risks, assess their likelihood and impact, and mitigate them through proportionate controls.

The Act distinguishes three tiers of customer due diligence:

  • Simplified due diligence (SDD). Permitted only where the risk assessment demonstrates genuinely low risk, for example, listed companies with transparent ownership or government entities.
  • Standard CDD. The default for all new and existing business relationships. Requires identification and verification of the customer’s identity, the purpose and intended nature of the relationship, and the beneficial owner.
  • Enhanced due diligence (EDD). Mandatory for PEPs, correspondent banking relationships, customers in high‑risk jurisdictions, complex or unusual transactions and any situation where the entity’s risk assessment flags elevated risk.

Ongoing monitoring must be proportionate to the assessed risk. For high‑risk relationships, industry observers expect regulators to look for evidence of at least annual file reviews and transaction‑pattern analysis.

KYC File and Recordkeeping Requirements

Every CDD file must contain the customer’s identification documents, verification records, the nature and purpose of the relationship, and all subsequent updates. The minimum retention period under AMLA 2026 is seven years from the date the business relationship ends or the transaction is completed. Records must be retrievable in a form that allows prompt response to FIU or supervisory requests. Boards should ensure that digital recordkeeping systems are tested for search and retrieval functionality before the next inspection cycle.

AML risk assessment template checklist:

  • Country/geographic risk factors identified and rated
  • Customer‑type risk factors (PEPs, complex structures, bearer instruments)
  • Product/service risk factors (cross‑border, high‑value, anonymous)
  • Delivery‑channel risk factors (non‑face‑to‑face, third‑party reliance)
  • Mitigating controls documented for each risk factor
  • Risk assessment approved by the board and dated
  • Next scheduled review date recorded

Reporting, Suspicious Activity Reporting (SAR) and Asset Freezing Under AMLA 2026

AMLA 2026 requires every reporting person to file a suspicious activity report with the FIU as soon as there is knowledge or reasonable suspicion that a transaction or activity is linked to money laundering, terrorism financing or proliferation financing. There is no minimum monetary threshold, the obligation is triggered by suspicion, not value.

The SAR process under the new Act operates as follows:

  • Internal escalation. Staff must report suspicions to the MLRO. The MLRO evaluates the information and, if the suspicion is maintained, files a SAR with the FIU.
  • Filing with the FIU. SARs must be submitted using the FIU’s designated filing platform. The FIU may request additional information, and reporting persons must respond promptly.
  • Tipping‑off prohibition. Reporting persons and their staff must not disclose to the customer or any third party that a SAR has been filed or is being considered.
  • Asset freezing. The FIU may issue a direction to freeze assets where it has reasonable grounds to believe they are proceeds of crime or connected to terrorism financing. Reporting persons must comply immediately upon receiving the direction.

For fund managers and trustees, the chain of reporting can be complex, particularly where multiple entities in a structure (fund, manager, administrator, trustee) become aware of the same suspicious activity. AMLA 2026 places the obligation on each reporting person individually, meaning concurrent SARs may be required. Compliance teams should map the reporting chain in advance and document it in the AML policy.

Interaction With Sanctions Screening and AML Sanctions Obligations

AMLA 2026 integrates Mauritius’ obligations under UN Security Council sanctions regimes. Reporting persons must screen customers and transactions against the consolidated sanctions lists and implement targeted financial sanctions, including asset freezing, without delay. The Act imposes a strict‑liability standard for failure to freeze designated assets. Compliance teams should automate sanctions screening and maintain audit logs of every screening event for at least seven years.

Practical Remediation Playbook: 30/60/90‑Day AMLA Compliance Mauritius Checklist

The following remediation playbook translates AMLA 2026 into concrete actions for compliance teams and boards. Each action is assigned a timeline, an owner and the evidence that should be retained for audit purposes.

Timeline Action Owner Evidence to Retain
Day 1–30 Conduct a gap analysis: compare current AML/CFT policies and procedures against AMLA 2026 requirements MLRO / Compliance Gap analysis report with section‑by‑section mapping
Day 1–30 Convene a board briefing on AMLA 2026; table the gap analysis findings Company Secretary / Board Chair Board minutes recording discussion and resolutions
Day 1–30 Confirm MLRO appointment and independence; assess whether current MLRO meets the Act’s requirements Board MLRO appointment letter; updated reporting‑line chart
Day 31–60 Update AML/CFT/CPF policy to reflect new definitions, BO register obligations and SAR procedures MLRO / Legal Board‑approved updated policy (dated and signed)
Day 31–60 Establish or update the beneficial‑ownership register; verify all existing BO data MLRO / Corporate Services Completed BO register; supporting identification documents
Day 31–60 Review and update CDD/KYC files for existing high‑risk relationships Compliance team Updated KYC files; EDD records for PEPs and high‑risk customers
Day 61–90 Deliver AMLA 2026 training to all relevant staff; include scenario‑based SAR exercises MLRO / HR Training attendance records; training materials; assessment results
Day 61–90 Test the SAR reporting chain: conduct a tabletop exercise simulating a suspicious‑activity scenario MLRO Exercise report; identified gaps and remediation actions
Day 61–90 Verify that sanctions‑screening systems are updated and audit logs operational Compliance / IT System configuration reports; sample screening logs
Day 61–90 Prepare an audit‑readiness pack: collate all updated policies, registers, training records and board minutes MLRO / Company Secretary Indexed compliance file ready for regulatory inspection

Boards should treat this playbook as a minimum. Entities with complex structures, such as multi‑layered fund platforms or GBCs with nominee shareholders, may need to accelerate the timeline or engage external advisers to complete remediation within a shorter window.

Enforcement, Audits and What to Expect From Regulators

Industry observers expect both the FSC and the BoM to commence thematic inspections focused on AMLA 2026 compliance within the second half of 2026. Based on regulator communications and past inspection cycles, the likely focus areas include:

  • Completeness and accuracy of beneficial‑ownership registers
  • Independence and resourcing of the MLRO function
  • Quality of business‑wide risk assessments (documented methodology, board approval, periodic review)
  • Timeliness and quality of SAR filings
  • Adequacy of training programmes and evidence of staff competence

During an on‑site inspection, regulators will typically request the AML/CFT policy, board minutes evidencing oversight, a sample of CDD files (including at least one EDD file), the BO register and evidence of sanctions screening. Entities should designate a single point of contact for regulatory communications and rehearse document retrieval to ensure files can be produced promptly.

Key Dates and Compliance Timeline

Date Event Action Required
18 April 2026 AMLA 2026 enacted (Act 3 of 2026) All reporting persons now subject to the new statute; gap analysis should commence immediately
Q2 2026 (ongoing) FSC and BoM expected to issue sector‑specific guidance notes and updated codes Monitor regulator websites; update policies as guidance is published
H2 2026 (anticipated) First thematic inspections under the new framework Complete remediation playbook; prepare audit‑readiness pack

Entities should subscribe to FSC and BoM notification services and monitor the Mauritius IFC AML/CFT page for updates on compliance initiatives and upcoming deadlines.

Downloads and Templates

The following templates are designed to accelerate your AMLA 2026 remediation. Adapt each template to your entity’s specific structure, risk profile and licensing conditions before use:

  • Board resolution template, sample wording for approving the updated AML/CFT policy and appointing the MLRO
  • MLRO appointment letter template, includes reporting‑line, authority and independence clauses
  • AML risk assessment template, structured worksheet covering geographic, customer, product and delivery‑channel risk factors
  • Trustee BO verification checklist, step‑by‑step guide for identifying and verifying beneficial owners of trusts
  • 30/60/90‑day remediation tracker, spreadsheet with built‑in owner assignment and evidence columns

Contact the editorial team to request Word and PDF versions of these templates.

Conclusion: AMLA Compliance Mauritius, Act Now, Document Everything

AMLA 2026 is not a future obligation, it is in force today. Boards, fund managers and trustees that move quickly to close gaps, update registers and train their teams will be best positioned to satisfy regulators and protect their licences. The 30/60/90‑day playbook above provides a structured path to readiness. For entities with complex structures or cross‑border dimensions, engaging specialist financial services compliance Mauritius advisers early will reduce risk, cost and the likelihood of enforcement action. The time to act on AMLA compliance Mauritius is now.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Yannick Fok at Eversheds Sutherland (Mauritius), a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Anti‑Money Laundering, Combatting the Financing of Terrorism and Countering Proliferation Financing Act 2026, Laws of Mauritius
  2. Financial Services Commission (FSC), AML guidance
  3. Bank of Mauritius, AML/CFT supervisory expectations
  4. FiveComply, Mauritius AMLA 2026: key changes to AML law and compliance requirements
  5. Mauritius IFC, Overview of AML/CFT/CPF compliance and ongoing initiatives
  6. Zigram, Mauritius AML/CFT/CPF Bill 2026
  7. Appleby, Fund finance laws and regulations 2026: Mauritius

FAQs

What are the key changes introduced by AMLA 2026 in Mauritius?
AMLA 2026 (Act 3 of 2026, enacted 18 April 2026) consolidates the previous FIAMLA framework into a single statute. Key changes include an expanded definition of reporting persons to expressly cover VASPs and TCSPs, mandatory beneficial‑ownership registers for legal persons and arrangements, enhanced FIU investigative powers (including the ability to request information without a court order), explicit compliance obligations for corporate service providers, and increased maximum penalties for money‑laundering offences and regulatory breaches.
The Act applies to all “reporting persons,” which includes banks and non‑bank financial institutions, licensed funds and fund managers, Global Business Companies, trust and corporate service providers, insurance companies, securities dealers, VASPs, and designated non‑financial businesses and professions such as real‑estate agents, dealers in precious metals and stones, lawyers and accountants when conducting specified transactions.
Within the first 30 days, boards should: (1) commission a gap analysis mapping current policies against AMLA 2026; (2) convene a board meeting to receive the gap analysis findings and pass a resolution approving remediation steps; (3) confirm the MLRO appointment and verify that the MLRO has the required independence and direct board reporting access; and (4) establish a remediation timeline with named owners for each deliverable.
Fund managers should update their AML/CFT/CPF policy to reflect the Act’s expanded definitions and obligations, review and refresh all investor CDD files (prioritising high‑risk relationships), establish or update the beneficial‑ownership register for managed funds, ensure the MLRO function meets independence standards, deliver updated training to all staff, and test the SAR reporting chain through a tabletop exercise. The FSC AML/CFT Code should be cross‑referenced to confirm that sector‑specific requirements are also addressed.
Every reporting person must file a suspicious activity report (SAR) with the FIU as soon as there is knowledge or reasonable suspicion of money laundering, terrorism financing or proliferation financing. There is no minimum monetary threshold. SARs must be filed through the FIU’s designated platform. The tipping‑off prohibition prevents disclosure to the customer or third parties. Failure to file a SAR is a criminal offence carrying increased penalties under the new Act.
AMLA 2026 raises the maximum fines and custodial sentences for both money‑laundering offences and regulatory non‑compliance. Directors and senior officers may be personally liable where non‑compliance results from their neglect, consent or connivance. Regulators may also impose administrative penalties, issue compliance directives and, in serious cases, revoke or suspend licences.
Trustees must identify and verify the beneficial owners of every trust they administer, including settlors, protectors, beneficiaries and persons exercising effective control. Where beneficiaries are designated by class, the trustee must assess risk at a class level and apply enhanced due diligence at distribution. The BO register must be updated promptly whenever ownership or control changes, and records must be retained for at least seven years after the trust relationship ends.
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Mauritius AMLA 2026: Practical Compliance Guide for Boards, Fund Managers & Trustees

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